/how the fark so you think steel is made and shaped you farking morons?//conspiracy assholes almost as bad as extreme religious folks.///extreme opinions rarely have good results over the course of human history

huh, why do they need to demolish anything to get that thing out of there?If it got there it can be removed via the same path. Just need to rent a crane, hook it to the landing gear, pull it out. Check the soil for body parts and random dna, all done.

But then NYC couldn't destroy the mosque.

For farks sake, there is no mosque. It's a farking community center that's getting renovated... there's a room for prayer, but calling it a mosque is as misguided as calling the YMCA a Cathedral.

Police confirmed Friday that the part was found wedged between two buildings in a very narrow alley between the rear of 50 Murray St. and back of 51 Park Place, the site where a mosque and community center has been proposed three blocks from ground zero.

That squishy sound you just heard was a million Teabaggers splooshing in unison.

jso2897:bindlestiff2600: include also the the hope that someone out there, has a plan and is competent.

I've always felt that this is a really important component in the conspiratorial mentality - a terror of the chaos that is the reality of our universe, and a need to see it put in order. It may be a complex form of OCD.

I have pretty bad ocd myself since I was young, but I don't allow it to get in the way of trying to have common sense and logic amongst all the bullshiat and opinions on this planet that don't have proven fact and evidence to back then up

bindlestiff2600:include also the the hope that someone out there, has a plan and is competent.

I've always felt that this is a really important component in the conspiratorial mentality - a terror of the chaos that is the reality of our universe, and a need to see it put in order. It may be a complex form of OCD.

/how the fark so you think steel is made and shaped you farking morons?//conspiracy assholes almost as bad as extreme religious folks.///extreme opinions rarely have good results over the course of human history

I have a friend who's all into 9/11 conspiracies, and lately, the marathon bomb 'conspiracy'. It's interesting just asking simple questions like "Please provide evidence for your assertions" and to be met with "the evidence was removed/taken/destroyed!" and "open your eyes, can't you see how the media/whatever is manipulated?"

He also has that "smartest guy in the room" complex, where he believes he is greatly more intelligent than he actually is. He has a day trading "system" that only loses money in the long run, but he keeps going because every once in awhile he'll have a day where he's ahead.

I don't know, it's interesting. Somewhere the ability to see logical conclusions becomes miswired, plus a sense of grandiosity and you have a conspiracy theorist.

I read a report a few days ago that people who believe in conspiracy theories are actually insecure about their intelligence but believe a conspiracy theory because it allows them to feel "superior" and convince themselves they know more than other people.

/how the fark so you think steel is made and shaped you farking morons?//conspiracy assholes almost as bad as extreme religious folks.///extreme opinions rarely have good results over the course of human history

The first time I heard the "fire can't melt steel!" claim I wondered how they thought blacksmiths worked. Do they think they put horseshoes into a fire before working on them just for the hell of it?

IIRC that noise originated with Rosie O'Donnell.

It has to do with the state of education at the time she went through the system, Boys would be sent to industrial education (shop) classes. Girls would get home economics. Boys would be shown films on industrial processes. Girls wouldn't have a clue.

/how the fark so you think steel is made and shaped you farking morons?//conspiracy assholes almost as bad as extreme religious folks.///extreme opinions rarely have good results over the course of human history

The first time I heard the "fire can't melt steel!" claim I wondered how they thought blacksmiths worked. Do they think they put horseshoes into a fire before working on them just for the hell of it?

huh, why do they need to demolish anything to get that thing out of there?If it got there it can be removed via the same path. Just need to rent a crane, hook it to the landing gear, pull it out. Check the soil for body parts and random dna, all done.

YoOjo:huh, why do they need to demolish anything to get that thing out of there?If it got there it can be removed via the same path. Just need to rent a crane, hook it to the landing gear, pull it out. Check the soil for body parts and random dna, all done.

huh, why do they need to demolish anything to get that thing out of there?If it got there it can be removed via the same path. Just need to rent a crane, hook it to the landing gear, pull it out. Check the soil for body parts and random dna, all done.

People should note that this find is not unusual. The entire debris field for one of the planes was in this area - extended out in a pie shaped wedge from the WTC impact point. Every few months something new is found - usually something small though, not an entire wheel.

fusillade762:How does something like that go unnoticed in a busy city like that for over a decade?

If only there was something out there, a series of words perhaps, that I could preferably access on my computer, maybe even from this very page, with little more than a single click, that could explain exactly that.